List of country subdivision flags in Asia

This page lists the country subdivision flags in Asia. It is a part of the Lists of country subdivision flags, which is split into continents due to its size.

Bahrain

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Governorates

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Flag Date Use Description
  2002–present Flag of the Capital Governorate A white field with the emblem of the Capital Governorate in the center.
  2002–present Flag of the Muharraq Governorate A white field with the emblem of the Muharraq Governorate in the center.
  2002–present Flag of the Southern Governorate A white field with the emblem of the Southern Governorate in the center.
  2002–present Flag of the Northern Governorate A white field with the emblem of the Northern Governorate in the center.
  2002–2014 Flag of the Central Governorate A white field with the emblem of the Central Governorate in the center.

China

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Special Administrative Regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  1997 – Flag of Hong Kong A stylised, white, five-petal Bauhinia blakeana flower in the centre of a red field[1]
  1999 – Flag of Macau Peacock green field with a lotus flower above the stylised Governor Nobre de Carvalho Bridge and water in white, beneath an arc of five golden five-pointed stars, where the large star is in the center flanked by four smaller stars, two on each side of the large star.[2]

East Timor

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Municipalities

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Baucau
  Flag of Oecusse

Georgia

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Flag Date Use Description
  1992 – Flag of Abkhazia Seven horizontal stripes alternating green and white; in the canton, a white open hand below a semicircle of seven five-pointed stars on a red field.
  2004 – Flag of Adjara Seven horizontal stripes alternating blue and white; in the canton, the national flag of Georgia.

Indonesia

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Provinces

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Aceh
  Flag of Bali
  Flag of Bangka Belitung Islands
  Flag of Banten
  Flag of Bengkulu
  Flag of Central Java
  Flag of Central Kalimantan
  Flag of Central Papua
  Flag of Central Sulawesi
  Flag of East Java
  Flag of East Kalimantan
  Flag of East Nusa Tenggara
  Flag of Gorontalo
  Flag of Highland Papua
  Flag of Special Capital Region of Jakarta
  Flag of Jambi
  Flag of Lampung
  Flag of Maluku
  Flag of North Kalimantan
  Flag of North Maluku
  Flag of North Sulawesi
  Flag of North Sumatra
  Flag of Papua
  Flag of Riau
  Flag of Riau Islands
  Flag of Southeast Sulawesi
  Flag of South Kalimantan
  Flag of South Papua
  Flag of South Sulawesi
  Flag of South Sumatra
  Flag of Southwest Papua
  Flag of West Java
  Flag of West Kalimantan
  Flag of West Nusa Tenggara
  Flag of West Papua
  Flag of West Sulawesi
  Flag of West Sumatra
  Flag of Special Region of Yogyakarta

Iraq

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Automonous Regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  1921 – Flag of Kurdistan The flag of Kurdistan is a red-white-green tricolour with a yellow sun in the centre.

Governorates

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Flag Date Ratio Use Description
?–present 2:3 Flag of Al Anbar Governorate[3]
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Babil Governorate
?–present 2:3 Flag of Baghdad Governorate[4][5]
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Basra Governorate[6]
  ?–? 2:3 Former flag of Basra Governorate
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Diyala Governorate[7]
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Halabja Governorate[8][9]
?–present 2:3 Flag of Muthanna Governorate
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Nineveh Governorate[10] White flag charged with the emblem of the governorate. The emblem depicts the leaning minaret of the Great Mosque of al-Nuri, Mosul surrounded by olive branches.
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Saladin Governorate[11][12]
  ?–present 2:3 Flag of Kirkuk Governorate[13]
?–present 1:2 Flag of Sulaymaniyah Governorate[14]
?–present 2:3 Flag of Wasit Governorate

Japan

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Kazakhstan

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Cities with special status

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Almaty
  Flag of Astana
  Flag of Baikonur

Regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Almaty Region
  Flag of Karaganda Region

Districts

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Akkol District
  Flag of Medeu District
  Flag of Tarbagatay District
  Flag of Uzunkol District

North Korea

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Special administrative regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  2002–present Flag of Sinuiju Special Administrative Region Aquamarine flag with a white Magnolia, in 3:2 ratio.

South Korea

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Provinces

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Flag Date Name Geocode Description
  1996–present Seoul Special City KR-11 Flag of Seoul
  2012–present Sejong Special Self-Governing City KR-50 Flag of Sejong City
  2023–present Busan Metropolitan City KR-26 Flag of Busan
  2001–present Daegu Metropolitan City KR-27 Flag of Daegu
  1996–present Incheon Metropolitan City KR-28 Flag of Incheon
  2000–present Gwangju Metropolitan City KR-29 Flag of Gwangju
  1995–present Daejeon Metropolitan City KR-30 Flag of Daejeon
  1997–present Ulsan Metropolitan City KR-31 Flag of Ulsan
  2021–present Gyeonggi Province KR-41 Flag of Gyeonggi Province
  2023–present Gangwon State KR-42 Flag of Gangwon State
  2023–present North Chungcheong Province KR-43 Flag of North Chungcheong Province
  2012–present South Chungcheong Province KR-44 Flag of South Chungcheong Province
  2024–present Jeonbuk State KR-45 Flag of Jeonbuk State
  2016–present South Jeolla Province KR-46 Flag of South Jeolla Province
  1997–present North Gyeongsang Province KR-47 Flag of North Gyeongsang Province
  1999–present South Gyeongsang Province KR-48 Flag of South Gyeongsang Province
  2009–present Jeju Special Self-Governing Province KR-49 Flag of Jeju Special Self-Governing Province

Kyrgyzstan

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Regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  1999–present Flag of Batken [15]
  1992–present Flag of Bishkek (independent city)
  1992–present Flag of Chüy
  1992–present Flag of Jalal-Abad
  1992–present Flag of Issyk-Kul
  1992–present Flag of Naryn
  1992–present Flag of Osh [16]
  1992–present Flag of Talas

Malaysia

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States

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Flag Date (century) Use Description
  1912 on Flag of the state of Kedah. A red field with the state coat of arms in the canton.
  1923 on Flag of the state of Kelantan. A red field defaced with a white crescent and star and two white kris and spears.
  1871 on Flag of the state of Johor. A blue field with an arranged crescent and five-pointed stars in a red canton.
  1957 on Flag of the state of Malacca. Two equal bands of red and white, with a crescent and five-pointed star in a blue canton.
  1895 on Flag of the state of Negeri Sembilan. A yellow field with two diagonal bands of red and black in the canton.
  1903 on Flag of the state of Pahang. Two equal horizontal bands of white and black.
  1965 on Flag of the state of Penang. A blue, white and yellow vertical tri-colour defaced with a betel nut tree.
  1869 on Flag of the state of Perak. A white, yellow and black horizontal tri-colour.
  1870 on Flag of the state of Perlis. Two equal horizontal bands of yellow and blue.
  1988 on Flag of the state of Sabah. A blue (top), white, and red tri-colour, with the silhouette of Mount Kinabalu on a light blue canton.
  1988 on Flag of the state of Sarawak. (Ibu Pertiwi) A yellow field with two diagonal bands of red (top) and black, defaced with a nine-pointed star.
  1965 on Flag of the state of Selangor. Red and yellow quartered, with a white crescent and five-pointed stars in the canton.
  1953 on Flag of the state of Terengganu. A black field defaced with a white crescent and five-pointed star, with white at the edge.

Mongolia

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Provinces

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Ulaanbaatar [17]A sky blue background and the Garuda bird in the center
  Flag of Arkhangai Province A light blue background and the emblem in the left
  Flag of Bayankhongor Province
  Flag of Bayan-Ölgii Province Three colors in vertical 2 blue and 1 green and a yellow crescent
  Flag of Bulgan Province A green background and province emblem in the center.
  Flag of Darkhan-Uul Province
  Flag of Dornod Province [18]
  Flag of Dornogovi Province
  Flag of DundGobi Province [19]
  Flag of Govi-Altai Province
  Flag of Govisümber Province
  Flag of Khentii Province
  Flag of Khovd Province
  Flag of Khövsgöl Province
  Flag of Orkhon Province [20]
  Flag of Selenge Province
  Flag of Sükhbaatar Province
  Flag of Töv Province
  Flag of Ömnögovi Province
  Flag of Uvs Province
  Flag of Övörkhangai Province
  Flag of Zavkhan Province

Myanmar

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States

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Flag Date Use Description
  1986[21] Flag of Chin State Hornbill on a branch within a white circle surrounded by 9 white stars atop a blue-red-green horizontal triband
  2010 Flag of Kachin State Blue circle with white mountains defaced with Manaw poles on a green field
  2010 Flag of Kayah State A Kinnara centred on a red-blue-green horizontal triband
  Flag of Kayin State Blue-white-red horizontal triband with a white star inset on top-left of blue band
  8 June 2018[22] Flag of Mon State Yellow Hamsa on a red field
  Flag of Rakhine State Emblem of Rakhine, a Shrivatsa, on a blue disk in the centre of a white-red horizontal bicolour
  12 February 1947[23] Flag of Shan State White circle, representing the moon, on a yellow-green-red horizontal triband

Regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  2022 Flag of Ayeyarwady Region Seal of Ayeyarwady Region on a blue field
  c. 2018 Flag of Bago Region Female hamsa perched on a male hamsa within a white circle bordered in green on a dark blue field. The text ပဲခူးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး ("Bago Region") is above the birds.
  2021 Flag of Magway Region Seal of Magway Region on a yellow field with the text မကွေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး ("Magway Region") above the seal in green.
  2022 Flag of Mandalay Region Seal of Mandalay Region on a red field
  30 September 2019 [24] Flag of Sagaing Region Seal of Sagaing Region centred on a yellow-blue-red horizontal triband with the text စစ်ကိုင်းတိုင်းဒေသကြီး ("Sagaing Region") above the seal within the yellow band.
  2010 Flag of Tanintharyi Region Naga facing forward with a white star above on a red-blue-green horizontal triband
  2022 Flag of Yangon Region Inner portion of the Seal of Yangon Region centred on a yellow-green-red horizontal triband with the text ရန်ကုန်တိုင်းဒေသကြီးအစိုးရအဖွဲ့ ("Yangon Region Government Group") on a white banner below the seal.

Union territory

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of the Naypyidaw Union Territory Seal of the Naypyidaw Union Territory on a teal-blue field

Self-administered zones and divisions

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Self-administered zones

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Flag Date Use Description
  2017[25] Flag of the Danu Self-Administered Zone[26] Blue over yellow bicolour with a green disc at the centre charged with a white flower
  Flag of the Kokang Self-Administered Zone Blue-red-green horizontal triband charged with a white star and 8 white circular rings forming an arc above the star.
  Flag of the Naga Self-Administered Zone[27][26] White over red bicolour with a green square in the upper hoist charged with two crossed spears and a tribal headdress
  Flag of the Pa Laung Self-Administered Zone Red circle on a light blue-yellow-green horizontal triband.
  1955 Flag of the Pa'O Self-Administered Zone[26] White star within a blue canton on a red-green horizontal bicolour

Self-administered divisions

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of the Wa Self-Administered Division There is no official flag, the flag of Myanmar is used

Pakistan

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Provinces

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Flag Date Use Description
  2005–Present Flag of Sindh A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem in the centre.
  1970–Present Flag of Punjab A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem in the centre. The emblem reflects Punjab's natural resources: its wheat, and the five rivers which give the province its name in Persian (from Punj = Five, Aab = Waters).
  2011–Present Khyber Pakhtunkhwa A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem on the flag shows the Jamrud fort which guards the Khyber Pass, and mountains in the back.
2011–Present Gilgit–Baltistan A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem on the flag showing the Baltit Fort and the Skardu Fort which guards the Himalayas (including K2), the designated national peak in the back.
  ?–Present Balochistan A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem in the centre. The emblem shows stylised mountains of this barren province and the principal mode of transport: the Dromedary camel, also the provincial animal of Balochistan.
  1975–Present Flag of Azad Kashmir The flag displays the Pakistani national colours, white and dark green, with a crescent and star to represent the Muslim majority, and a saffron square to represent the Buddhist, Hindu, Sikh and other minorities of the disputed region, the colours are clearly influenced by the Mughal Empire. The four white stripes symbolise the main rivers of the Kashmir region; Indus, Jhelum, Chenab and Ravi. It also represents the five geographic divisions of the disputed territory, Baltistan, Gilgit, Jammu, the Kashmir Valley and Ladakh.[28]
  2011–2018 Federally Administered Tribal Areas A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem in the centre. The emblem shows a castle and two swords. Underneath it are the letters FATA – abbreviation of the province.
  1901–1955 1970–2010 North-West Frontier Province A traditional green flag, with the provincial emblem in the centre. The emblem shows a castle and a crescent moon. Underneath it are the letters NWFP - abbreviation of the province.

Philippines

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Autonomous regions

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Flag Date Use Description
  2019 – Flag of Bangsamoro The flag of Bangsamoro is a horizontal tricolor of green, white and red with the yellow seven-pointed star surrounded by a yellow crescent both centered on the white band and a white kris centered on the red band.

Provinces

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Russia

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Flag Date Use Description
  2000 – Flag of Altai Krai
  1992 – Flag of the Altai Republic
  1999 – Flag of Amur Oblast
  1992 – Flag of the Republic of Buryatia
  2001 – Flag of Chelyabinsk Oblast
  1997 – Flag of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
  1997 – Flag of Irkutsk Oblast
  2005 – Flag of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast
  2010 – Flag of Kamchatka Krai
  1994 – Flag of Khabarovsk Krai
  2003 – Flag of the Republic of Khakassia
  1995 – Flag of Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug
  2000 – Flag of Krasnoyarsk Krai
  1997 – Flag of Kurgan Oblast
  2001 – Flag of Magadan Oblast
  2009 – Flag of Nenets Autonomous Okrug
  2014 – Flag of Omsk Oblast
  2011 – Flag of Perm Krai
  1995 – Flag of Primorsky Krai
  1992 – Flag of the Sakha Republic
  1995 – Flag of Sakhalin Oblast
  1997 – Flag of Sverdlovsk Oblast
  1992 – Flag of the Tuva Republic
  1995 – Flag of Tyumen Oblast
  1996 – Flag of Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
  1995 – Flag of Zabaykalsky Krai

Sri Lanka

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Provinces

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Flag Date Use Description
  November 14, 1987 – Flag of Central Province The flag is designed to represents the Central Province and its three districts Kandy, Matale and Nuwaraeliya.

The Golden colour Lion that carries a sword and the four Bo leaves at the four corners in the maroon colour background represents the Kandy District.

The white layout represents Matale District and Nuwaraeiya District which represents the Upcountry is symbolised by the white lotus. The Sun and Moon are for Eternity.

  January 1, 2007 – Flag of Eastern Province
  November 14, 1987 – Flag of North Central Province
  November 14, 1987 – December 31, 2006 Flag of North Eastern Province Was adapted as the Flag of the North Province after the demerger of the North-Eastern Province[29]
  January 1, 2007 – Flag of Northern Province Blue border – ocean resource; Green – the greenery and agriculture; Red – labour, industriousness and Hindu culture, religion; White – fraternity, peace; Radiating sun indicates synergy of power and natural energy source, also Tamil people and language in the Province
  November 14, 1987 – Flag of North Western Province It features a brown bovine with a sun and moon symbol on a white background. There are 15 small eight-pointed cross-stars in the background, and a green and brown woven border surrounds the whole.
  November 14, 1987 – Flag of Sabaragamuwa Province
  November 14, 1987 – Flag of Southern Province A picture of a lion flag can be seen in frescos in historical Dambulla cave temple. This historical flag made of carving a picture of a running lion with a small sword in its forepaw is considered to be the Ruhuna flag.

Furthermore, King Dutugamunu left the Magam Kingdom with the lion flag ahead for the battle to unite the country. The flag is a picture of a yellow lion on a red blood colour background. Accordingly, it was decided to use for the Southern Provincial flag the picture of the lion running with a small sword (iluk koolaya) in its forepaw of the Ruhuna flag and the red colour and yellow colour of the flag taken on the war front by King Dutugamunu.

It was decided to use the same for the Southern Province flag mixture of colours and the standard to represent all communities in Galle, Matara, and Hambantota and four bo leaves (Metta, Karuna, Muditha, Upeksha) of the national flag.

It was agreed that the forms of the sun and moon of the flag of Southern Province flag should be in the same forms as the sun and moon of the flag of Devinuwara Devalaya and that the same form that of the flag of Hambantota District. Accordingly, it was expected to keep the integration of Galle, matara and Hambantota. Therefore, the Southern Province flag can be considered a combination of several traditional flags.

The small sword (iluk Koolaya) is the symbol of control, but it does not reflect terror or suppression. The small sword represents Justice and fairness. Running lion represents velocity fearlessness and pride.

The sun and moon stand for stability prosperity and augustness. It expresses the traditional saying "Until the sun and moon exists". The sun and moon of the flag are considered to be symbols of victory. The combination of colours around the flag depicts the existence of Southern Sri Lanka, victorious war history, religion and patriotism, mutual cooperation and harmony

  November 14, 1987 – Flag of Uva Province In the days of the Sinhala kings, Sri Lanka had been divided into twelve provinces and ruled and each of these twelve provinces had been allotted a flag. Accordingly, in order to bring about qualities such as pleasantness, innocence, greatness and royalty, a flag with a picture of swan had been allotted to the Uva Province.

The flag that was gifted to Uva Province by the King Sri Wickrama Rajasinghe who ruled the kingdom of Kandy during the period 1798–1815 can be seen even today at the National Museum ( Courtesy: Book entitled “Uva Ithihasaya” by Panditha Naulle Dhammananda Thero )

  November 14, 1987 – Flag of Western Province

Taiwan

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Below are the flags used in the political divisions of Taiwan.

Provinces

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Flag Duration Use Description
  Taiwan Province

Special municipalities

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Flag Duration Use Description
  2009–Present Kaohsiung City 高雄市 Stylized "高". Colors symbolizing sunshine, vitality, environmental protection, & ocean.[30]
  2009–Present New Taipei City 新北市 Highly stylized "北" in the form of four hearts arranged to resemble a four-leaf clover.[31]
  2008–Present Taichung City
  2009–Present Tainan City
  2009–Present Taipei City
  2014–Present Taoyuan City

Provincial cities

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Flag Duration Use Description
  Chiayi City
  Keelung City

Counties

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Flag Duration Use Description
  Changhua County
  Chiayi County
  Hsinchu County
  Hualien County
  Kinmen County
  Lienchiang County
  Miaoli County
  Nantou County
  Penghu County
  Pingtung County
  Taitung County
  Yilan County
  Yunlin County

Thailand

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Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Amnat Charoen Province Purple flag with the Seal of Amnat Charoen Province in the center.
  Flag of Ang Thong Province Yellow, Green bicolor with yellow on top and green on the bottom with the Provincial Seal on the center.
  Flag of Bangkok Green flag with the Seal of the Bangkok Metropolitan, in white at the center. Used by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and the Governor of Bangkok.
  Flag of Bueng Kan Province Purple, White, purple with the center bar being wider than the purple bars with the Provincial Seal on the center.
  Flag of Buriram Province Purple and Orange flag split in half vertically with the Purple on the left and the Orange on the right with the Provincial Seal in the center.
  Flag of Chachoengsao Province Red flag with the Seal of Chachoengsao Province in the center.
  Flag of Chai Nat Province Pink flag with the Provincial Seal in the center.
  Flag of Chaiyaphum Province
  Flag of Chanthaburi Province

The flag of Chanthaburi Province has a red background with the province seal.

  Flag of Chiang Mai Province
  Flag of Chiang Rai Province

The flag of Chiang Rai Province is a vertical tricolor band, two with blue and one with light purple and an elephant in the center.

  Flag of Chonburi Province
  Flag of Chumphon Province
  Flag of Kalasin Province
  Flag of Kamphaeng Phet Province
  Flag of Kanchanaburi Province
  Flag of Khon Kaen Province
  Flag of Krabi Province
  Flag of Lampang Province
Flag of Lamphun Province
  Flag of Loei Province
  Flag of Lopburi Province
  Flag of Mae Hong Son Province
  Flag of Maha Sarakham Province
  Flag of Mukdahan Province
  Flag of Nakhon Pathom Province
  Flag of Nakhon Phanom Province
  Flag of Nakhon Ratchasima Province
  Flag of Nakhon Sawan Province
  Flag of Nakhon Si Thammarat Province
  Flag of Nan Province
  Flag of Narathiwat Province
  Flag of Nong Bua Lamphu Province
  Flag of Nong Khai Province
  Flag of Nonthaburi Province
  Flag of Pathum Thani Province
  Flag of Pattani Province
  Flag of Phang Nga Province
  Flag of Phatthalung Province
  Flag of Phayao Province
  Flag of Phetchabun Province
  Flag of Phetchaburi Province
  Flag of Phichit Province
  Flag of Phitsanulok Province
  Flag of Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya Province
  Flag of Phuket Province
  Flag of Prachin Buri Province
  Flag of Prachuap Khiri Khan Province
  Flag of Ranong Province
  Flag of Ratchaburi Province
  Flag of Rayong Province
  Flag of Roi Et Province
  Flag of Sa Kaeo Province
  Flag of Sakon Nakhon Province
  Flag of Samut Prakan Province
  Flag of Samut Sakhon Province
  Flag of Samut Songkhram Province
  Flag of Saraburi Province
  Flag of Satun Province
  Flag of Sing Buri Province
  Flag of Sisaket Province
  Flag of Songkhla Province
  Flag of Sukhothai Province
  Flag of Suphan Buri Province
  Flag of Surat Thani Province
  Flag of Surin Province
  Flag of Tak Province
  Flag of Trang Province
  Flag of Trat Province
  Flag of Ubon Ratchathani Province
  Flag of Udon Thani Province
  Flag of Uthai Thani Province
  Flag of Uttaradit Province
  Flag of Yala Province
  Flag of Yasothon Province

United Arab Emirates

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Emirates

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Flag Date Use Description
  1820–present Flag of Abu Dhabi a red field with a white rectangle at the canton.[32][33][34]
  1820–present Flag of Ajman and Dubai a red field with a white bar at the hoist.[35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42]
  1952–1961 Flag of Fujairah a red field with a white Arabic calligraphy in the center.[43][44]
  1820–present Flag of Ras Al Khaimah and Sharjah a large red rectangle on a white field.[45][46][47][48][49]
  1820–present Flag of Umm Al Quwain a red field with a white bar at the hoist and a large white star and crescent in the center.[50][51][52]

Uzbekistan

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Autonomous republics

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Flag Date Use Description
  1992– Flag of Karakalpakstan Three equally horizontal bands of blue, yellow, and green separated by a narrow red and a narrower white band. On the hoist side of the flag, in the blue stripe, are a white crescent moon and five white stars.[53][54]

Yemen

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The Federalization of Yemen or the Federal Republic of Yemen was the outcome of the National Dialogue Conference. The Dialogue members also agreed that Yemen would be transformed into a six-region federal system.[55] The regions would be Azal in the North, and Saba in the center, and Tihama in the West, and Aden and Jand in the South, and Hadramawt in the East.

Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Aden Region
  Flag of Azal Region
  Flag of Hadhramaut Region
  Flag of Janad Region
  Flag of Sheba Region
  Flag of Tahama Region

References

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  7. ^ "Deputy governor of Diyala contracts COVID-19".
  8. ^ "مشروع قانون موازنة العراق لعام 2018 يشير إلى حلبجة كمحافظة (Iraq's 2018 budget bill refers to Halabja as a governorate)".
  9. ^ "زيارة رئيس المحكمة الى محافظة حلبجة".
  10. ^ "Mosul, Iraq. 2nd July, 2019. New governor of Nineveh Mansour al-Mar'eed speaks to Xinhua in an interview at his office in Nineveh province, Iraq, July 2, 2019. The governor of Iraq's northern province of Nineveh called on the Chinese companies to take part in the reconstruction of its capital Mosul. TO GO WITH: Iraqi governor calls on Chinese companies to take part in reconstruction of Mosul. Credit: Khalil Dawood/Xinhua/Alamy Live News Stock Photo - Alamy".
  11. ^ "Saladin (Salah ed-Din) Governorate (Iraq)".
  12. ^ "Chaos prevails in Saladin as two governors lock horns over who runs the governorate".
  13. ^ "Iraq fires Kirkuk governor in Kurdish referendum stand-off". Financial Times. 14 September 2017. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  14. ^ slemani.gov [@SlemaniGov] (14 June 2022). "رەوشی مافەكانی مرۆڤ تاووتوێ‌ دەكرێت https://t.co/iT3fPt3Tui https://t.co/P9ZVqR5vDv https://t.co/xutgAlQztV https://t.co/7M8B9ip87O https://t.co/3JrqGjKZZU https://t.co/xL8fxXDw6I" [The human rights situation will be discussed.] (Tweet) (in Central Kurdish). Archived from the original on 26 August 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022 – via Twitter.
  15. ^ Covid - 19; Президент; Кеңеш, Жогорку; Өкмөт; Саясат; Экономика; Коом; Аналитика; Аймак. "Жалал-Абад облусунун символикалык атрибуттары тандалды". Кабар - Кыргыз Улуттук Маалымат Агенттиги (in Kyrgyz). Retrieved 2022-04-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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